Eleven tugs will be needed to maneuver the vessel, which is as long as three football fields.

She will have to squeeze into the estuary through the narrow exit from her dock.

Once free, she will wait for low tide and have her tallest masts and antennae stripped down to pass under the Forth bridges, before making her way to the open sea under her own power.

Despite the upcoming trials, the carrier is not expected to be ready for action for several years.

A sister carrier, the HMS Prince Of Wales, is also under construction.

“I think there are very few capabilities, by any country, that are as symbolic as a carrier strike capability,” the Queen Elizabeth’s commander, Captain Jerry Kydd, told the BBC.

“Submarines you can’t see, but these are very visible symbols of power and power projection,” he said.

Despite such high praise, the carrier project has been battered by waves of criticism, with one senior military figure anonymously telling the Guardian in 2015 that the program was a toxic “combination of naval vanity and pork-barrel politics.”

The source said that by developing carriers the UK was “moving in the direction absolutely contrary to strategic developments of our time,” seeing how current wars are fought with drones and special forces.

There are also concerns over whether there will be enough American-made F-35 fighters to equip both ships, as a parallel project to purchase the US jets has seen years of delays.